xt70zp3vwk17 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70zp3vwk17/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661003  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  3, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  3, 1966 1966 2015 true xt70zp3vwk17 section xt70zp3vwk17 Inside Todays Kernel
Saturday was a big day tor the horse

set: Poge

The attack on four SOS members
an unheolthy climate, editorial
says: Poge Sis.
shows

Two.

The Fine Arts School will celebrate
its founding with an April Arts
l:
Three.
Page
Fes-tiro-

The KSA is the product of a Murray, Western dream: Poge Four.

HIE W M

The COP is "orerly optimistic,'' a
Percy man tells Young Republicans:
Page Eight.

Future opponents of the Cats had a
weekend: Poge Ten.

Vol. 58, No. 23

University of Kentucky
OCT.
LEXINGTON, KY., MONDAY,

3,

1G

Twelve Pages

Dean Harper Takes

New VISTA Position
By DICK KIMMINS
Kernel Staff Writer
Kenneth Harper, former Dean
of Men and Director of the Inter-

leave
ing UK. He had a one-yeof absence from the University
that was to be terminated in

national Center, has been named
as the Director of Training for
the Federal antipoverty volunteer agency, VISTA.
Harper has been in Washington as consultant to Volunteers
in Service to America since leav

"The appointment yesterday

February

1967.

only formalized an arrangement
we had with Dr. Harper for some
time," spokesman for VISTA said
Monday. "He (Harper) has been
in the job for some time."
Vice President for Student

University Plays Host
To Southern Educators

'iJyV

v.

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-

Affairs, Robert L. Johnson said,
"I had no idea of his (Harper's)
plans. The first time I knew of
Dr. Harper's appointment was
when I read it in the morning

paper."

Sunday's

announcement

squelched reports Harper would
return to the campus in February.
Jack Hall who has been acting Dean since Harper's departure said, "There has been no
official indication of whom will
be the new Dean. Ken Harper
is still officially the Dean as
far as I know."
Harper is in Washington and
is unavailable for comment.
However he told the Kernel
on Sept. 9 he definitely planned
to return to UK after his leave
of absence terminated on Feb.

.

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Photo by Dick Ware

Taking A Break...

John T. Caldwell, the chancellor of North Carolina State,
challenged a group of Southern educators meeting at
Although it was a mite chilly Saturday, Pat Stansbury took time
Carnahan House to see that "the university means more than
out for some water skiing during a Kappa Delta Sorority retreat
the sum total of the specialists that reside there."
at Herrington Lake.
L.aldwell said It we want
1, 1967.
our universities to be innovative, North Carolina State University,
Sunday's announcement cliand Dr. Felton G. Clark, presimaxed reports that Harper would
develop flexibility, and to mani-fenot return to the University folinventiveness, then we have dent of Southern University.
Dr. J. Wayne Reitz, president
to encourage it and reward it."
lowing his leave.
of the University of Florida, and
He said that educators must
"As far as I know I'll be
back at the University as soon
grapple with determining the Dr. John D. Williams, chancellor of the University of Missiseducational goals and then proas my term with VISTA is comduce programs that fit the goals sippi, will speak in the afterpleted," he said in September. to Gov. Edward T. Breathitt said here Monday he became dedicated
noon.
instead of relying on tradition.
getting a new constitution for Kentucky when he studied the
Johnson at that time said he present charter as a University law student.
He chided universities for
was "assuming Harper would
Speaking before the UK Law stack the board of trustees or
their faulty evaluation programs
return as dean of men."
School Forum, Breathitt said the regents of colleges and uniand said "too many evaluations
state needs constitutional re- versities" is a "wise provision."
are made without the whole
The spokesman for VISTA
He criticised the "scarecrow
said Harper had been considering vision because the present docuknowledge of the facts."
Universities are "hopelessly
the new position for about two ment has been "so long a hind-er- a tactics" of the new charter's
nee to progress."
months.
inadequate and faulty in our
opponents, and said he would'
Under law based on the 1891 "rest the whole case of this
evaluation techniques," he said,
Special To The Kernel
Lap
constitution, Breathitt told the document with the people of
and cited three areas where imA
BLOOMIXCTON, Ind.
law students, "you who run for
is needed:
provement
Kentucky if they know the facts."
Bloomington Superior Court
the legislature after graduation
1. Evaluation relating to stuThe changes the proposed new
himself last
will be completely frustrated trydent admission policy, passing Judge disqualified
charter Breathitt called signifrom hearing the case
Thursday
ing to do an effective job."
courses, and graduation;
ficant are:
of two men arrested for handing
2. As relates to the faculty
I
1. The legislature is strengthChanges in the proposed new
out DuBois Club information on
for promotion; and
constitution relating to Kenened.
the Indiana University campus.
3. Evaluation of the institu2. The case load on the state's
tucky's judicial sy stem, he said,
Judge John Rogers disqualtion as a whole.
is "the reform lawyers and stuified himself because he is a
highest court is reduced.
Caldwell said he felt there
dents of law (realize) is badly
3. The cost and number of
member of the IU Board of Truswas a relationship between the
needed."
elections is lessened.
tees.
preoccupation with grade-poiBreathitt praised the proposed
4. Money is saved when local
The two men, Bruce Klein,
standing and the Selective Sercharter for making the state super- governments and school districts
graduate student of philvice and suggested that there
intendent of public instruction issues revenue bonds.
osophy, and Allan Gurevitz,
should be no deferment of stuformer employee of the
an appointed rather than elected
5. The state board of educadents at all.
Department of Fine Arts, were to
post, taking the post out of tion is elected instead of ap"Our system of evaluation
be arraigned Thursday for trespartisan, factional politics. And, pointed, and it chooses the superis being incorporated into the
DR. KENNETH HARPER
making it so "no governor can intendent.
passing in the Student Union.
Selective Service System and we
don't know how to escape from
it," he said.
He noted that, as yet, there
is no satisfactory way to evaluate
faculty effectiveness and said
that there is trouble in evalu"Charges of student isolationism and' student government activity," Curris coin- Representatives from Kentucky collegiate
student governments were told this weekend withdrawal from reality are not only asinine," mented.
ating the institution as a whole
he said, "but reflect a grave misunderstanding
that their governing bodies should not consince some people are only wilThe University iscurrentlydecidingwhere
sider
relative to the purpose of student governproblems.
ling to think of their own probto build a new football stadium, and the
lems rather than those of the
The duty of the student governing b(xly, ment."
location's effect on student attendance at
C. W. "Deno" Curris, academic dean of
whole university.
Curris, a graduate of the University where games has been considered, although no
Midway Junior College, told the group, is he was awarded the Sullivan Medallion, was student
Earlier, the group heard I. E.
group has formally participated in
to "express student opinion on those matters the keynote speaker for the
Ready, director of the Commuconthe talks.
nity College Department of directly affecting the student body and to ference for state student government sponCurris recommended "extensive student
act in behalf of the student body in in- sored by the UK government.
North Carolina, describe the
involvement in the decision-makinstitutional
process"
college system there
community
Curris also said that student governments
as a step between high school
"I consider it futile . . . ," Curris said, should "make it clear to all that the era on such matters.
He listed other
of student
"to express opinions, especially in the guise of 'in loco
and college.
parentis is in eclipse and that government, saying responsibilities
it should:
of reflecting the values of the entire student a
The meeting, of the Southrising tide of young men and women want
1. Be overly cautious that students'
ern Association of Land Crant
body, on such matters as . . . the wisdon and merit control" over the
rights
regulation of and privileges are not
of our involvement In Vietnam."
Colleges and Schools, will conusurped by faculty
their own affairs.
members or administrators, doing away with
Curris said he believes that student governtinue through Tuesday.
now falling
(The 'in loco
The University is hosting this
ments should express opinions "on such into disuse on parentis, theory, holds that "in loco parentis," the idea that college
many campuses,
administrations take the place of parents.
session and about 50 of the
matters as discrimination against st talents the
university administration becomes, in
2. See enacted a code of student academic
South's top college administrain public accommodation and draft deferdeed, the parents of the student while he freedom.
tors are attending.
ments, those indeed affect student welis in school. Many campuses are turning to
3. Become involved in the educational
In addition to Caldwell and fare
but that he rejects the notion rules that consider the student an adult and
process, seizing the initiative in evaluation
Ready, the group will hear UK"! that a student government should expand its the master of his own affairs.)
of instruction and instructors.
Provost Lewis W. Cochran; Dr.
resources by discussing national and interSites of athletic stadiums is one thing
John T. Caldwell, chancellor of national issues.
Continued on Pge 4
that "falls within the legitimate sphere of
Monday

Gov. Breathitt Cites

ct

Need For Revision

Trial Postponed
Until New Judge
Can Be Named

-

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Curris: Discuss Only Campus Problems
two-da- y

policy-making-

g

."

..."

,

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct.

2

3,

lf

PARADING THE HOUNDS

It Was A Big Day For The Horse Set

By MARYJEAN WALL

Kernel Staff Writer
For the past 36 years the
people who chase foxes on horseback at the Iroquois Hunt Club
have thrown a big shindig for
the farmers over w hose land they

hunt.
It's on this day each fall,
before the hunting season opens,
that the elite of Central Kentucky's horse society treat the
local farmers, to whom they are
indebted, to a barbecue lunch

y
horse show.
and an
Apparently the farmers seem
to enjoy it, for they come with
blankets and folding chairs, as
all-da-

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The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, sLexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Nick Pope,
chairman, and Patricia Ann Nickell,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCRIPTION

RALPH BROWN
Kernel Arts Writer
first seL()U1SVILU:-T- he
lection in Actor's Theatre of
Louisville's I960 67 repertoire,
Arthur Miller's "All My Sons,"
has gotten the year off to an
excellent start.
The play concerns thedestruc-tio- n
of a son's respect for his
father because of the discovery
that his father had, knowingly,
shipped out defective airplane
engines during war-timChris Keller, the son, played
by Max Howard, portrays a man
discovering that his idol has feet
of clay. Howard, who is new to
the company this season, handles
his role quite well, but he does
not really begin to develop his
character until the beginning of
the second act.
--

Jo Deodato, in the role of
Mrs. Keller, Chris's mother, has
come close to her excellent portrayal of Mrs. Loinun in last
season's performance of "Death

of a Salesman." In her present
role, she plays a woman who is
determined to maintain her grip
on her unreal world.
The play owes the largest part
of its success to Ned Beatty in
the role of Joe Keller, the character on whom the playwright
focuses his moral disapprobation.
As the father, he is a prime
representative of the kind of mor
ality that can completely ignore
the responsibility a man has to
his society .
As thedirector, Richard Block,
has pointed out in a short essay
in the playbill, the situation
dramatized by Miller has close
parallels to the recent automobile-safet- y
controversy .
The play seems to have delivered its message most pointedly, since the essay by Block
has been neatly clipped from
the programs that were not distributed on opening night. It is
possible that someone with influence was distrubed by the

tuxtsavaeaai'

TELEPHONES

Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2320
Editor
News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
Socials

announcer.
In the general picnic atmos

By

$8.00
$.10

Advertising, Business, Circulation

out the day. At noon everyone
takes a break for lunch. "This
is our way of saying thanks to
the farmers for allowing us to
ride over their land," said Mrs.
Gerald Mayer, the show ring

phere that prevails, horseman
and farmer alike become quite
congenial, and the hunt club is
thus assured of many more happy
hunts over the neighboring countryside.
Wallace Potts, of Ceorgctown,
began cooking the meat for Satur-

Drama: 'Sons9 Excellent Start

RATES

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
KERNEL

sorted kids and dogs, and set
up camp next to their cars w hich
they park all around the show
ring.
The party begins at 9 a.m.
with the first equitation event,
and these various classes, as
they arc called, run on through

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The event everyone eagerly
awaits for is the parade of the
hounds, late in the afternoon.
The hounds of the Iroquois
Hunt Club are paraded around
the show ring by the Master of
Foxhounds, who is head of the
hunt, and the whippers in, his
assistants who keep the hounds
in line. This is the most colorful
spectacle of the afternoon, as
huntsmen atop
the
their beautiful hunters parade
the brown and white spotted
hounds at their horses' feet.

ALPHA
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P Vote for Queen & Ugly Man Thurs. & Fri.
g Dance Friday, Oct. 7 featuring Exiles g
& Dale Wright & Wright Guys
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g RACES Saturday, Oct. 8
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DOCTOR ZIIilAGO
IN PANAVISI0N'

Judge for the show was Mrs.
John Lee, of The Plains, Virginia, who hasofficiatedatmany
important shows throughout the

A CARLO PONH PRODUCTION

DAVID LEAN'S FILM

GUARANTEED

for

General Motors" might not be
good for the country as a whole.
This production of the play,
which has been maligned for its
artifice, uses to full advantage
the dramatic impact developed by
the artist. Kach act builds to
the kind of dramatic involvement which is just short of the
unbearable that marks really first-rat- e
drama.
"All My Sons'" will run until
Oct. 16 and all tickets must be
reserved.

at 8:00 p.m.
1:30 p.m.;

Mrs. Mayer.

east.

thought that "what's good

EVERY EVENING

WED, and SAT.

MATINEES
JL

day's lunch at 4 p.m. Friday,
and continued to tend the outdoor barbecue through the night
despite the rain that deluged the
Lexington area. "Wedidn't think
he was going to make it," said

W ldl54Diros

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* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct.

New Fine Arts School

UK Bulletin Board

Will Celebrate Opening
With April Arts Festival
An arts festival celebrating
the founding of the University
School of Fine Arts has been
scheduled to begin April 4.
The
salute to music,
art, and literature will open with
a production by the department
of theater arts and close April
22 with a performance of a touring dramatic attraction called
"An Evening's Frost," which was
based on the work of poet Robert Frost.
The festival will include art
exhibits, concerts, lectures, panel
discussions, a film festival, and
a performance
by the Mcrce
Cunningham Dance Company.
In the art gallery throughout
the festival will be an exhibition of 50 masterpieces representing the most famous art works
owned by American colleges and
universities.
The University School of Fine
Arts was organized last February
to include the music, theater,
and art departments, and the
art gallery. Dr. Hubert Henderson is director of the new school,
and Harry Clark serves as director of fine arts serv ices.
The theme of next April's
celebration is "The University:
Patron of the Arts."
The philosophy behind the
organization of such a festival,
Clark said, is that any modern

happening in the arts today. We
can t cover the field entirely with
local artists, so we arealso bringing in many important figures
to participate in the festival."
The new works of a trio of

university must play an important part in sponsoring the
arts in our contemporary society.
"We think we have a responsibility," he continued, "to let
our community witness what is

role of Frost in the New York
premiere of "An Evening's Frost"
in 1956, will appear in the Lexington performance in Cuignol
Theatre on April 22.
Also as part of the festival,
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
will be performed by the Lex-

The Merce Cunningham
Dance Company, which is part
of America's modern dance movement, will appear in Memorial

y

American composers will be presentee! during the festival. The

Coliseum on April 13.
Will Gecr, who created the

Debated At Nexus

Half praise and half blame for the administration, with little
disdain for the student body as a whole, dominated a dialogue
on free speech at Nexus Friday night.
Robert Frampton, a member
that untoward inof Students for a Democratic knowledgingoccur."
cidents will
Society, precipitated the discusFrampton said he felt the
sion at the Rose Lane coffee(Vietnam) war was "promoting
house. He offered his analysis
orthodoxy." Because it exists and
of what was termed a crisis in
because we have friends or relfree speech by a Kernel editorial.
atives in it, he said, "we feel
Those who joined in the discussion were divided about a need to justify it."
Offering another cultural
equally over whether an SDS
analysis, a student said she felt
member's right to speak at the
Student Center on socialism was that "13,500 of the students have
never had a new or tolerant
rightfully postponed until a definite speakers policy "can be thought in their lives." She was
called down by several others
evolved."
who said only a handful of UK's
SDS member Bill Murrell said
14,000 students engaged in acts
on the speech was deagainst groups whose ideas they
nied freshman Brad Washburn, do
not share. "This is no reflec"when they decided mayhem
tion on the (climate fostered by
be done to him."
might
One student, defending the the) University," one said," but
on individuals alone."
University stand, said he was
only thinking of the SDS. "I
wouldn't want them telling me,
"Ok, talk and get killed, at
least you have free speech."
Another felt that Johnson and
Student Center Board Director
241 SOUTHLAND Dr.
Fred Harris were tempering the
ideal with the realistic in "ac

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SHIRTS ON HANGERS

The Home Economics Convocation will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday in the Agriculture Auditorium. At this time new Phi
Upsilon Omicron members will
be recognized. Miss Kentucky,
Jane Olmstead. will be guest
speaker.

First
Choice
Of The

vites

UK Speech Policy

SPECIAL!

The Young Democrats Club
will be notorizing applications
for absentee ballots Tuesday and
Club registration
Wednesday.
will be opened at that time
also. The next regular club meeting is scheduled at 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 11 in Boom 110 of the
Law Building.

University Choristers and the ington Philharmonic and the LexUniversity Symphoncttc will give ington Singers.
Panel discussions, which will
the world premiere of a new
choral piece commissioned from be in two sessions April 20, will
cover "The University and the
Norman Dcllo Joio. The Heriwill play a Arts" and "The Unity of the
tage String Quartet
Arts." Participating panelists
new w ork by John Vincent. Vincent Persichetti will write an will include authors, critics, comorgan piece which will be played posers, and artists such as Elizain recital by an unannounced beth Hardwick, Norman Dello
Joio, Harold Spivacke (chief of
organist.
a leader the music division of the LiComposer John Cage,
in America's musical avantgarde, brary of Congress), Jack Tworkov,
will give a lecture as part of Richard Schechnew, Lawrence
William Hull (new
the festival. He first gained no- Alloway, and
executive of the Kentucky Arts
toriety by attaching bolts, screws, Commission).
and other hardware to piano
strings and writing music for
what became known as "the prepared piano."
Cage now champions "aleatory" music, or "music by
chance," in which a composer
gives the general outline of a
composition, sometimes by
means of symbols and numbers
on graph paper, and then inperformers to fill in his
outline from their own inspiration.

3, 19M- -3

ii

OmJf

A

'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct.
AT
l
TTh
IT TIT 7"
1
I

--

3, 19f(i

Jtfotii.uiv., Murray

Dreamed Of KSA
Last spring, Carson Porter, president of the University's student
government association, and Bill Cunningham, then President of
Murray State's student government, both envisioned a statewide
student government organization. HaI f flnv shlfipnt organization
Each introduced a bill at his in the state.
school to form the Kentucky Stu"Affiliation with a national
dent Association (KSA), with student organization is not
planeither knowing that the other nned' said Porter.
had the same idea. Cunningham's
The individual student govbill went through first, and UK ernments would become stronger
received a notice of it as they in two
ways, Porter believed.
were about to act on theirs.
with
This past weekend, the KSA
held its organizational meeting
at UK. The conference featured
a banquet Friday night, and a
series of discussions Saturday
morning.
discussion
A constitutional
was included in these, with UK
being selected to draw up a
constitution and distribute it to
the various schools, so that they
can prepare ammendents.
The constitution could possibly be ratified during the asnext meeting, Nov.
sociations
19. Then officers could be elected
and the KSA could begin work.

Porter said that the association would "provide a central
governing body and increase communications between colleges
and universities of the Commonwealth through their student government representatives."
There is a better chance in
accomplishing things as a group,
Porter added.
Porter emphasized that the
potential stage
right now, but it has the "most
significant, magnanimous poten- KSA is only in a

First, negotiating

y

i

f

ernment organizations, especially
SUSCA (Southern United Student Government Association).
The KSA is "more practical"
than a national organization, according to Cunningham, because
it can take a stand on individual problems.
The association could "protect the rights of individual students," he believed.
Porter said that the smaller
schools could be helped in solving
problems that the larger ones
had already faced.
Also, problems encountered
by transfer students could be
solved by establishing "common
denominator courses," so there
would be less difficulty in transferring from one school to another, said Porter.
Eighteen of the 24 schools in
Kentucky are interested, including all the major schools. Every
school would be granted equal
representation, said Porter.

The last ripple of administration distrust in college students'
ability and right to have a say in their education is fading from
the campus of Western Kentucky University.
That sums up the current "day some evidence of increased stuby day" change at the Bowling dent freedom:
Green school, where student un1. Freshman fall class elecrest two years ago was "buildtions, formerly run entirely by
ing to a crisis," according to the administration, are now
John Lovett, Western's represenhandled by Student Government.
tative to the new Kentucky Stu2. Students now organize
dent Association.
homecoming celebrations.
3. Freedom of the press has
The group held an organizational meeting last weekend at been established, along with the
the University, and Lovett shared appointment of a student pubhis view of Western's changing lication board.
now
4. Student Government
scene with a reporter between
sessions.
sanctions campus organizations.
The Western administration,
Lovett said, no longer takes the
religious and fatherly attitude
toward students as in the past.
Instead, it is assuming a guidance role. And, he said, "a
student's private life is becoming
more private."
The change began in spring,

Continued From Page 1
He said student academic freedom should involve:
1. A disciplinary code listing those of fenses for which students could be disciplined, and
protecting them from arbitrary
and capricious administrative
action.
2. A code of due process,
providing students an adequate
and fair hearing, right to counsel,
and an unbiased jury to hear

appeals.
3. A student publications
board, with student representatives appointed through student
government channels, and not by
the college president.

Lexington,

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during a seminar discussion Saturday. The
day session was. hosted by the UK government.
two-tuck-

...

said.

"Perhaps the course is set . . .
but I do not think so. For I
am convinced that exerted student opinion can and will be felt
and that a dynamic student government can be a powerful force
in higher education.

heard."
Curris said the prospects for
increased student involvement in
affairs unfortunately are bleak.
The growing impersonality on
campuses, more and more grad-

KENTUCKY

uate assistants teaching, the
deplorable state" of academic advising, the "estrangement" of outstanding teachers
from students and computerized
scheduling all portend the de
"oft-observ-

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unjust, discriminatory, incompetent, or capricious faculty
evaluation."
5.

Guarantees

for

student free-

doms of association, expression,
and privacy.

Discussing student

govern-

involvement in the educational process, Curris said "no
greater
injustice consistently
occurs on college campuses than
subjecting students to mediocrity
in the classroom. Despite protests . . . the quality of teaching is scarcely recognized as an
important criteria in faculty evalment

uation.

"And
have yet to find on
this (UK) campus or any other
I

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relationcline of faculty-studewith all the concomitants
ships
of such learning experience, he

in this stutea meaningful attempt
to improve the quality of inAs you all are
struction
well aware, quality teaching is
rarely recruited, and the time
has come for students to be

4. Provisions for academic review of student grades, realizing
"students deserve protection

allowed

FOREIGN

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KSA Told To Represent Students

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officials as a representative body,
and secondly, gaining advice and
ideas from fellow members.
Cunningham, now a first-yelaw student at UK, said that
the KSA was strongly influenced
by all the national student gov-

Western Administration
Easing Up, Student Says

when Western officials
formation of a Student
Government, the first in the
school's history, Lovett said. But
the real impetus was criticism
the school administration received when last December it
tried to censor an
publication deemed objectionable and suspended its editors,
he said.
Lovett, a senior, singled out
Dean of Students Charles Keown
as the administrator who has
guided the change, and listed

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l(i-- .r

YAF Getting Younger
The Collegiate

WWs

fk

Li

Prent Service

WASHINGTON
Young Americans for Freedom is getting
younger all the time.
The conservative organization has recently dropped programs
to mobilize the young voter while adding a new division for high
schoolers.
Almost a hundred secondary school chapters have been chartered
in the two years YAF has been actively recruiting them, Executive
Director David Jones said in a recent interview. Things have
been going so well, he continued, that the national office is
setting up a special high school department. YAF, primarily a
c